Which World Cup problem from 1986 could still matter in Mexico this year

FootballSports
15 May 2026 • 2:19 AM MYT
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Image from: Which World Cup problem from 1986 could still matter in Mexico this year
Photo by Erica Denhoff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Mexico’s World Cup history carries one warning that still feels relevant before this year’s tournament, even with major scheduling differences.

In 1986, the problem was not simply heat. It was heat combined with altitude, television-driven kick-off times and players asked to perform in draining conditions.

Forty years later, Mexico is again part of the World Cup stage, and the temperature conversation has returned before the tournament begins.

Managers and players warned about Mexico heat in 1986

Image from: Which World Cup problem from 1986 could still matter in Mexico this year
Photo by Schlage/ullstein bild via Getty Images

The complaints in 1986 were blunt. Hungary coach Gyorgy Mezey slammed the timetable, calling it “ridiculous”, because players were being asked to play at noon.

French manager Henri Michel also said heat, more than altitude, was giving his team difficulty as they tried to adapt before the tournament.

Diego Maradona criticised organisers for putting business and broadcast interests above players, while Jorge Valdano called noon matches an attack against footballers.

Those concerns were not abstract. In Leon and Irapuato, noon temperatures could reach 95°F, while Monterrey was expected to climb beyond 100°F.

Mexico’s 2026 schedule looks different, but one concern remains

This year, Mexico is scheduled to host 10 group-stage games across Mexico City, Guadalajara and Monterrey, but the timing is less extreme than in 1986.

The current schedule has only one group-stage match listed at 13:00 local time, with the other nine in afternoon or evening windows.

That is a major difference from 1986, when noon starts became one of the tournament’s defining controversies and shaped player complaints before a ball was kicked.